We need to make sure that we are preparing the housing market for this spike. We need to make sure that we've learned from the lessons of the past—and that we're building a system that prevents housing bubbles and busts.
To look at this in more detail, I'd like to focus on a couple of trends in our business that haven't been dominating the headlines—but are quite significant for the future:
• First, Fannie Mae's new book of business, which shows that the stronger lending standards we adopted going into 2009 are starting to pay off.
• Second, our progress in helping struggling borrowers through an effort across our company that is unprecedented.
• Third, the role that Fannie Mae has played in keeping the market moving by providing more than one trillion dollars in funding.
• Fourth, what we are doing to change Fannie Mae for the future, as the debate over the GSEs starts to take shape.
First, our new book. What's behind this book is one of the basic lessons of the crisis. As an industry, we can't just put people into homes. We have to make sure they can keep their homes.
Otherwise everyone suffers—the borrower, the mortgage industry, the financial system and the economy.
Earlier this year, we conducted a national survey of consumer attitudes about housing and homeownership. We wanted to find out how the crisis affected their views. And the results go right to that sense of realism that I mentioned earlier.
While a lot of people still aspire to own a home, 60% thought it would be tougher to get a loan today—and they're right. A solid majority of renters assume it will be harder for their kids to buy a home—and they're right, too. But this is for the right reasons. We need to make sure people are ready and prepared for homeownership so that they can be successful homeowners.
Across the board, we see a much deeper understanding of how credit, income, job security and a downpayment could stand in the way of buying a home.
This is all healthy. It means we have a good chance to put in place a sustainable housing recovery—one with the right mix of owners and renters in this country. That also means getting in position to qualify for a mortgage may take longer than it has in the past.
At the same time, the housing finance industry has put itself in a stronger, more sensible place.
Across the board, we've returned to common-sense lending standards. The question is, will those standards stick once the market recovers?
This is not academic to Fannie Mae. We have a duty to support a healthy housing market, given our central role in the system. That's why we're strengthening our lending standards. We're emphasizing safer products, especially long-term, fixed-rate loans. We're also asking for better credit quality, better and more complete documentation, and better appraisals on the properties.
By adopting these standards, we have begun to build a new book of business with some of the highest-quality loans we have ever seen. Let me give you some specifics from our last filing:
Loan-to-value ratios, on average, are nearly 70%. In a market where many homeowners have limited or no equity, 30% equity is quite strong. Next, credit scores average about 760, which FICO rates as "top tier." For comparison, the median FICO score is around 712, and subprime is below 620. Another key factor is loan types. Over 90% of our new borrowers have plain, old-school mortgages—long-term, fixed-rate loans. And finally, the number of subprime loans in our new book is zero.
If you take all of these factors together, we're building the strongest book of business we've seen in the last decade.
It's also worth noting that our average guaranty fees on single-family loans have actually come down from 2008 to 2009. Since we price for risk, when loan quality goes up, our guaranty fees go down.
Now hearing all of this great news about our new book of business, you may ask, "Well, what about your housing mission?" Let me be clear—we have not forgotten our mission. To the contrary, last year, Fannie Mae helped to provide financing to more than 1.7 million low- and moderate-income families, more than one million families living in underserved communities, and nearly 760,000 very low-income households. Affordable lending was roughly 50% of our business last year.
So you can see, Fannie Mae's business is still focused on low-, moderate- and middle-income families. We're making sure these Americans have the same access to mortgage credit as upper-income families.
New realism doesn't mean turning our back on the families who need us.
Our stronger lending standards simply make sense.
First, they're better for homeowners. Borrowers with these new loans are more likely to keep their homes as long as they want. With fixed rates for long terms, their loans give them shelter from years of interest-rate swings.
Second, these stronger loans are better for the mortgage market. And here's why. Since the start of 2009, Fannie Mae has backed about two out of every five new single-family mortgages securitized in America. In all, we've purchased or guaranteed more than 3.6 million conventional single-family loans. So just by strengthening our lending standards, we've ensured that a large share of the market will be more safe and sound for many years to come.



























